':S." 



July 8, 1915. 



The Florists^ Review 



48 



Th* florist* whoa* cards appear on the pftcea carrying this head, are prepared to fill orders 

 Ivem ether florists for local delivenr on the usual tMwls. 



ROCTAN Hassadmsetts 



U\mU 1 Vi 1 ^ 24 Tremont St. 



I. NEWMU ft SONS GORP'N 



Ordert by wire receive urompt and careful execution. 



We can refer to leading florists in all principal 

 cities. Established 1870. 



UAnBQNEi S42 Soylston St.* 



BOSTON 



Member Flerisb'Teleiraph Delivery AssodaliM 



LOWELL, HASS. 



NORSE & BEALS, 8 Merrimack Sq. 



Members riorists* Telegraph Delivery Association 



RANDALL'S FLOWER SHOP 



HAR|Y I. RANDALL, Proprietor 



Pbone: Park 94 



IS PLEASANT ST., WORCESTER, MASS. 



■ember Florlate' Telegrraph Dellverr Aaaodatlon. 



H. F. A. LANGE 



Worcester, Mass. 



Deliyers to all points in New England. 

 126,000 square feet of glass. 



Member Florists' Telegraph Delivery Assodatioo 



SALT LAKE CITY 



ALSO PARTS OP COLORADO. IDAHO. 

 MONTANA AND NEVADA 



HUDDART FLORAL CO. 



eS South Main Street 

 Members Floriats' Telegraph DeUTery Aas'n. 



A Card This Size 



Costs Onlr 70c per Week 

 on Yearly Order 



It won Id keep year name and yonr facilities 

 before the -whole trade. 



A half-Inch card coats only S6c per week on 

 yearly order. 



PROVIDENCE, R. I. 



I aei M 

 Mew Eatlaad Psiati 



T.J. JOHNSTON * CO., 



171 Weybetset Bt. PrevMi 



BROCKTON, MASS. 



All orders received, delivered promptly in Now 

 W.W. HATHAWAY, ^°«^*°'i- 9 Miiq Sired 



LYNN MASS ^'BBs BROS. 



IJ 11111, lIHlM. 2S8 union street 



IWAMPtCOn 



2S8 Union Street 



We deliver also 

 SaUGUS NANUT S«L£M 



WELLESLEY COLLEGE 



Daaa Hall. Walnut Hill. Bockbridge Hall Sehcls 



TAIL,BY, Wellesley, Mass. 



Long Distance Tel.. Wellesley 44-1, 44-2. 44-3 



CThe largest staff of 

 floral artists in New Eng- 

 land handle our immense 

 volume of orders promptly 

 and efficiently. A feature 

 of the PENN Business is 

 PBNN Service, c* J6 JH 



BOSTON, iVIASS. 



"Penn, the Telegraph Florist" 



Member of Florists' Telegraph Delivery Association 

 37-43 BROMFIELD STREET 



Boston, Massachusetts 



143 Tremont 8tr««t 

 The Centrally Located Florist Shop 

 \mn \m RedirMty. We cm cr AU Piiiti ii New EMlui 



Member Florlsta'TeleKraph Delivery. 



BOSTON, MASS. 



HINRY R. COMUV, Fleriet, 6 Parti St 



so yean' experience In the floriet boeiaMa cunnteM 

 eflSciency to take care of all orders. 304 bUowm 



Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Lester spent the 

 Fourth at Sodus Point, N. Y. 



H. J. H. 



ST. Loms. 



Tlie Market. 



The market last vpeek was fine. The 

 wholesale houses had an immense 

 amount of good stock. Shipments com- 

 ing from outside points arrived in ex- 

 cellent condition, especially roses. July 

 4, the one holiday in the year on which 

 flowers lose their charm, was generally 

 observed Monday, July 5, and the 

 wholesalers and the majority of retail- 

 ers closed their places at noon. 



Daily receipts of almost everything 

 seasonable were greatly in excess of 

 the demand. The large supply of gladi- 

 oli that came in daily upset the market 

 completely. Field-grown stock filled all 

 the available space in the five whole- 

 sale houses. Prime stock brought $3 

 per hundred, while $10 per thousand 

 was asked for the lower grades. There 

 was an abundance of sweet peas, which 

 were hard to clean up at any price. 

 Carnations are showing good quality 

 for this time of the year. Consignments 

 of these have been large, and many 

 are left after the morning sales are 

 over. Asters are beginning to come 

 in, and clean up nicely at fairly good 

 prices, especially the first quality. The 

 heavy supply of roses helped to swell 

 an already flooded market. There are 

 plenty of lilies, daisies, cornflowers, 

 snapdragons, dahlias, coreopsis, phlox 

 and candytuft. 



The new crop of fancy ferns is in; 

 also, plenty of smilax, asparagus and 

 other greens. 



Various Notes. 



Mr. and Mrs. Fred C. Weber, Sr., 

 will leave July 15 on a trip to Wil- 

 liams Bay, Wis., where they ydll spend 

 a month's vacation. On their return, 

 Mr. and Mrs. Fred C. Weber, Jr., will 

 spend the rest of the summer at the 

 same place. 



Miss Matilda Meinhardt will leave 

 the latter part of this month for an 



RHODE ISLA ND 



JOHNSTON BROTHERS 



LEADING FLORISTS 



38 Domnce Street, PROVIDENCE 



Members Florists' Telegraph Delivery Ass'n. 



BURUNOTON. VT.-lr4ere far VenMit %wk ierlk- 

 en 1. T. filM te ynr eetira eaUsfactisa at ri|M prices. 



Orders 

 solicited for 

 all parts of 

 Connecticnt 



Stores: 



741 Main St 



8&( Asylum Sb 



Greenhouses i 



Benton St. 



Member Florists' Teleffrapb Hartford« 

 Delivery Aaeodatlon. Conn. 



REUTER'S 



For Rhodo Island and 



STORES 

 New Lenden, Cenn., Nerwtch, 

 and Weeterty. R. I. 



Members Florists' Telegraph Delivery Ass'a. 



Yankton, South Dakota 



We grow Roses, Carnations, and all seasonable 

 flowers. Floral emblems that are right. Give 

 us your northwest orders. IGO-page catalogue. 



GURNEY GREENHOUSE COMPANY 



A Card This Size 



Costs Only 70c per Week 

 on Yearly Order 



It wonid keep your name and yoxir facilities 

 before the whole trade. 



A half-tnch card coets only 36c per week on 

 yearly order. 



VERMONT'S FLORIST 



W. E. PETERS 



137 St. Paul St.. BURUNOTON. VT. 



